Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1963)
THE BATTALION Pag-e 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 1, 1963 READ BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS FACTS, MAN, FACTS! CHAR-BROILED DUTCHBURGERS Better than Ordinary Hamburgers YOUR TASTE WILL TELL DIAL VI 6-9968 FOR YOUR BAG FULL TO GO Dutch Kettle Snack Shop WHOLE PIES TO GO VI 6-9968 100 HIWAY 6, SOUTH DEPENDABLE SERVICE ALL WORK GUARANTEED CANGELOSIS Shoe Repair 2609 Texas Avenue SHOE REPAIR • SHOE DYEING REASONABLE PRICES ONE DAY SERVICE Intramurals \ With five activities of this year’s intramural program beginning Oct. 7, Charles E. McCandless, intra mural director, is sending an ur gent plea out for sophomore man agers. Approximately 20 slots have to be filled and McCandless asks in terested persons to contact the intramural office this week. Man agers, who officiate at games, re ceive intramural sweaters if they serve all year, McCandless said. Swimming, the first intramural activity, began Monday in Downs Natatorium. Other swimming pre liminaries will be held through next Monday. Class B races start at 5 p.m. Class A&C begin at 7:30 p.m. The finals for Class B diving vtdll be at 5 p.m. Oct. 8. Finals in all other events will be raced Oct. 9. Freshmen flag football, horse shoes and bowling start Oct, 7. Class A&C basketball and handball begin on the same day. NEW YORK <A>) _ Duke Rod ney and Porterhouse probably will compete in the Prix’d Ameri- que at Vincennes near Paris next winter. But Su Mac Lad, winner of the recent International Trot at Roosevelt Raceway, will stay home. Su Mac Lad is a gelding and ineligible. IfthXb. OumuMA I Wo 'MzM pA&di-tted 1,00 (riUurrt CjaJl&wi cu (-tiMiOL CA* ntfmr . c fiiJt-wdvi fvuxjMH-H,. its ~tb VJvtku* erV^paAt /udJ' [MS'- 'jvuIX UJC&A ■ YtrtA. yiAMf "Acubt~ ur^tUr . ^ /l*rOnVL\, ytrM -/'Aovv&- \ VHo /tJ TH€ SfcY " ^ Cost , ScluAA wlb Uh. G'-E: futdu) - /UjAtcw ... opfruCfeci. (jjLf -fcoMis oJ <S-~F• dtiAA Utlo-Citpf tiuqb. aJ^/z^/tuCiL alt had (UrtruUXlaYed lo MAc/a. a. '''Y&fhotk. /fuf." dd/wf€di^u / EYE tptlidtlM dd- ( deJlMA; -foM-ZAA. pa/lt~ A A. 0-U4AJ 0 ^ )C «e 5 CA^&er 1 ^hsmtmCpi iim. a =5 o Hr- l\ - / /T-B - p/JL £aA<AacU-iv\Cys. 4.' .osc 'hiZs--C 2 imTA CcAWTeR - cam Do /fj-Mr Co Secofjes Jr /gs ^—-- r fitaJl tyot) So-C&^hawk CMcCj ■4 PuMcli Icro CAA(U -* O^JtrhcIf) toJUuM WfricU X LOpCCL o7tx.-h^ l\t<Uun\ LotncU * 'F/vuJr JtrO &vju A StrA-ci 3,(701) ATO-rtU -to ' tA/nd 7 ‘ J?UjKma Wh*'/ (efiH 6'IJ: t3Zo,5yV to t!^ kt-J ^ qtpnuUtw /fi vf'of gJuidituJH h&C- “0h£- ft jbuf -/Ax. ZhtTruo bZi/risy ^ • ZZtbjtkcZ cUiifWu’M M*' tyet/eJL * cpucCt aJirtM/z, Ai lubvrjAdts tr'E ckasmcA • jhrvcfk prpu$M oc’ttfi /mM- JalrucaT^U / l A . tjurOAM (A£m, -hruqL % JaiyucdtL * aJwZTif -Wkku- UuucmMa. fU.JA bMrdu.CJ& (Poy Jen aJuiAinunt ^rluUi CUAU/ICJ Aa ArUAtewot tted O-d- toiCd ~ti) /OJAApA T^ogreiS /s Our Most important Product GENERAL % ELECTRIC 2ND DEFEAT Ags Fall 17-0 By JIM BUTLER Coach Hank Foldberg used quarterbacks like they were going out of style Saturday afternoon but to no avail as the Aggies picked up their second defeat of the year, 17-0, at the hands of Ohio State. If it hadn’t have been for A&M’s strong fourth down offense and defense it could have been much worse. Jim Keller’s punting and Travis Reagan’s punt and kick off returns consistently pulled the Cadet’s out of a hole. Keller kicked eight time for 353 yards and a 42-yard average including a booming 63-yarder from his own end zone. Reagan traveled 84 yards on three kickoff returns. ALL FIVE A&M quarterbacks saw action with two other ex-quarterbacks run ning at halfbacks. Jim Linn- staedter started the parade and lasted for almost two periods when Keller took over. The tall defensive specialist finished out the half and gave way to sophomore Charles LaGrange in the third quarter. LaGrange drew his pink slip after three plays when he was stacked up for a 16- yard loss by the stout Buckeye de fense. PUNIOR DANNY MCILHANY replaced LaGrange and finished out the game. The fifth quarterback, John Sparling, saw action at half back and on defense. Mcllhany got off to a bad start but achieved the most success in moving the sluggish Aggie offense. The junior from Houston fumbled twice on his first series of plays but recovered both times. On his next chance he guided the Farmers I 50 yards from their own 19 to OSU’s 31 before he fumbled the ball way to the Buckeyes. In the middle of the fourth period, Mcllhany took the Aggies down to Ohio State’s 32 where an intercepted pass ended the drive. In wanin^minutes of the game, A&M, at the hands of Mcllhany, drove to OSU’s 21 where a fourth down pass play was thwarted and Ohio State took over with 11 seconds to play. Hargett Hurt Against OSU Halfback George Hargett was on the injury list Monday as the Aggies began preparations for their Southwest Conference open er with Texas Tech at Lubbock Saturday night. Hargett hurt his knee in the game with Ohio State and his playing status won’t be deter mined until mid week. Tommy Meeks moved to the first team in his place. Terrell Flash Punts Rivals Into Trouble “I don’t remember if I ever kicked one that far before in a game, but I’ve been punting since my junior year in high school.” The speaker was tall Jim Keller, A&M’s number 2 quarterback, one of the top defensive backs in the SWC and the Aggies’ splendid punter. He was referring to the 63-yard boot he boomed against Ohio State in Columbus Saturday afternoon. It was a pressurized kick, too, be cause the Aggies’ scrimmage line was their own five and he was standing deep in the end zone. The Buckeye safetyman fielded the punt on Ohio State’s 32-yard line. After two games Keller has a 42.1 average for 15 kicks. His punt ing has kept the Aggies out of a lot of trouble. What makes him such a consis tently good punter? ‘Mostly it is his ability to drop the football correctly on his foot,” says Aggie backfield coach Leonard Brown. “He has good hands and his timing is real good. He has worked hard on his punting and it is paying off.” Keller, a 22-year-old senior, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Keller Jr. of Terrell, Tex. He has a brother, John, 23 and a sister, Kaye, 19. He stands 6-4 and is long-legged, which gives him added leverage for punting. He was a Class AA all-state quarterback at Terrell High School and was a member of the National Honor Society. “Coaching him is an easy task,” Brown says. “He’s intelligertt, re tains instructions and works hard on execution.” ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Touch-type, hunt-and-peck, type with one hand tied behind your back—it’s easy to turn out perfect papers on Corrasable. Because you can erase without a tiace. Typing errors disappear like magic with just the flick of an ordinary pencil eraser.There’s never a telltale erasure mark on Corrasable’s special surface. Corrasable is available in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In convenient 100-sheet / packets and 500-sheet ream /p: boxes. Only Eaton makes Corrasable. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON PAPER CORPORATION <s> PITTSFIELD, MASS. Purchase Your EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper from The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” I , AGGIE OFFENSE Jim Keller’s punts supplied only A&M offense. THE SMUT 111 CALDWELL, TEXAS CALENDAR ™T, t h h o e p 00 THURSDAY, OCT. 3— STEAK NIGHT 6:30 to 9:00 p. m. $2.50 SUNDAY, OCT. 6— NOON BUFFET 11:30 a. m. to 2:00 p. m. $2.00 THURSDAY, OCT. 10- SEA FOOD BUFFET 6:30 to 9:00 p. m. $2.00 SUNDAY, OCT. 13- NOON BUFFET 11:30 a. m. to 2:00 p.m. $2.00 THURSDAY, OCT. 17- LA PARISIENNE GOURMET BUFFET 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. $2.50 SUNDAY, OCT. 20- NOON BUFFET 11:30 a. m. to 2:00 p. m. $2.00 THURSDAY, OCT. 24— SWEDISH SMORGASBORD 6:30 to 9:00 p. m. $2.00 SUNDAY, OCT. 27- NOON BUFFET 11:30 a. m. to 2:00 p. m. $2.00 THURSDAY, OCT. 31— MEXICAN FOOD BUFFET 6:30 to 9:00p.m, $2.00 SURREY RIDES ON SUNDAY SPEND A COUNTRY WEEK END AT THE SURREY. CHILDREN FREE NOTICE! BOWLING LEAGUE BEING FORMED Mixed League Bowling On Wednesday Night, October 2 Starting at 7:30 FOR: Faculty, Staff and Students All interested persons call VI 6-8721, Ext. 24, MemoriJ Student Center, or come by Games Desk In Bowling Area, M.S.C. taxai